Its a great shot if you ask me.for some reason it makes me think of the sixties (1960)s and it has a real home feel to it.Good tone in the B&W aswell.Are you studying photography because from what I can see your photography has taken leaps and bounds with regaurds to your pictures.

Its a great shot if you ask me.for some reason it makes me think of the sixties (1960)s and it has a real home feel to it.Good tone in the B&W aswell.Are you studying photography because from what I can see your photography has taken leaps and bounds with regaurds to your pictures.

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Wow Chris, that is the nicest thing I have ever heard. No I haven't been studing photography but I HAVE learned so much just from this website. I have also invested in some books to help me too. I have taken a likeing to Portraits over the last months.

The moment, their expression, the light ... all very good. The photo really radiates emotion.
I agree about the reflection on their lenses, but I feel the photo as such is so strong that it does not REALLY matter that much, I mean: it cannot make this photo "bad"!

The glare could be PSed but it wouln't look good.
If this is a posed situation, the next time take a picture in the 'final' pose and then, without the models moving, slide off their glasses and take another shot.

The glare could be PSed but it wouln't look good.
If this is a posed situation, the next time take a picture in the 'final' pose and then, without the models moving, slide off their glasses and take another shot.

It's quite a gorgeous shot, but for the future, perhaps you could have your models remove the lenses from their glasses. At least, that's what the guy who took my senior photos did, and it worked. The glasses really are a part of the people who wear them.